Defacement contest likely to target Web hosting firms

Lock up your server farms

Common Topics

A defacement challenge scheduled for Sunday is likely to target Web hosting companies rather than individual Web sites.

Defacement archive site Zone-H reasons that crackers will target Web sites they have already rooted because of the limited time set aside for the challenge.

The 'rules' of the challenge state that there will not be any difference when counting a single defacement (single IP) or a mass-defacement (many domain names on the same IP), so Zone-H reasons, hosting firms will be the main target.

"Given time frame will be only six hours, what is mostly going to happen is that a lot of Web hosting companies will be hit, instead than single servers belonging to different companies," Zone-H reports.

Due to the sharp decrease of the defacement over the last few days, Zone-H reasons crackers rooting possible targets without defacing them, so to be ready with a lot of ready-to-be-defaced targets to be used on the contest day. The defacement competition challenges crackers to deface as many as 6,000 sites in the shortest time possible to win the contest.

Point values are based on the operating systems hacked and defaced. HP-UX, Apple, and IBM-AIX are worth more points due to their limited use as Web-hosting platforms, and because they are targeted less often than Microsoft and Linux-based systems.

Zone-H is forecasting anywhere from 20,000 attacks might arise from the challenge. However it is downplaying fears that mass disruption of Internet services due to the attacks.

"A mass-defacement (even of several thousands domain names) is usually conducted opening a single connection to the attacked server," it reasons.

Defacement attacks occur all the time, not only during a mass hacking contest. But in the run up to the latest hacking spree there's all the more reason to shore up security defences.

Zone-H recommends the following general security precautions to sysadmins:

Download and apply all security patches

Shut down all the unnecessary modules on a Web server

Close all the unnecessary ports

It's also a wise precaution to check for the presence of any backdoor/rootkit on systems. Tell tale signs include: freshly added unknown users, suspicious connections on open port and suspicious shell program. Spotting these kinds of problems is where vulnerability scanners come in useful.

Finally, in the know thy enemy category, Zone-H, reminds sysadmins of the most common vulnerabilities targeted by defacers. These include flaws in the following packages/services: OpenSSL, Samba, Webdav, Frontpage extension misconfiguration, AIX ftpd, Solaris telnetd, Sendmail, Wuftpd, Proftpd, PHPnuke (not for mass defacement but still an ever present risk), OmniBack II and Cpanel.